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Wehiwa’s walk-off homer closes door on Hogs’ run-rule win over Gamecocks

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Wehiwa Aloy’s walk-off three-run homer in the bottom of the seventh punctuated No. 3 Arkansas’ 12-2 run-rule win against South Carolina (17-6, 1-3 SEC) in the SEC home opener Friday night at Baum-Walker Stadium.

With the win, the Razorbacks improved to 21-2 overall, marking their best 23-game start to a season since the 1982 campaign (21-1-1), and 3-1 in SEC play.

Friday night’s lopsided win, which was the Hogs’ ninth by run rule this season, also represented Arkansas’ 500th SEC victory since joining the conference ahead of the 1992 campaign.

Zach Root, making his second Friday start and second SEC start, was dealing against South Carolina, turning in Arkansas’ first seven-inning complete game since Kacey Murphy did so against Florida on May 27, 2017, in the SEC Tournament.

The junior left-hander struck out seven over seven innings of two-run ball, allowing six hits and issuing one walk.

The Razorback offense provided Root with more than enough run support, tagging Gamecock starter Brandon Stone for five runs (three earned) on five hits and three walks in three innings.

South Carolina relief pitcher Matthew Becker did not fare any better against the relentless Arkansas lineup, giving up five runs on eight hits and a walk in 3.1 innings.

Arkansas scored a run in the second, tacked on four in the third and two more in the fourth before putting the game away with a five-spot in the seventh.

Five Razorbacks, led by Charles Davalan’s four-hit night, recorded multiple hits in Friday’s offensive onslaught, and three Hogs, led by Aloy’s three-RBI performance, logged multiple RBI games in the win.

Justin Thomas Jr., who finished 2-for-4 with a double and two RBI, opened the scoring with a two-out RBI single in the second.

Bases-loaded walks to Brent Iredale and Ryder Helfrick in the third moved Arkansas’ advantage to 3-0 before a two-out error by South Carolina shortstop Henry Kaczmar brought home a pair of runs and extended the lead to five.

A two-run homer by Logan Maxwell, who finished the ballgame 2-for-3 with a home run and three RBI, in the fourth inning gave Root and the Hogs a commanding seven-run lead to work with.

The Razorback outfielder has hit a career-high six home runs this season, surpassing his career total of five in 110 games at TCU from 2022-24.

South Carolina broke through with runs against Root in the fifth and sixth inning to cut its deficit to 7-2, but the Arkansas southpaw, who logged his second quality start of the season, did not surrender.

The Razorbacks carried a five-run lead into the bottom half the seventh, setting the table for their five-run frame and their ninth run-rule win of the season.

Thomas Jr.’s RBI double scored Cam Kozeal, who went 2-for-4 with a double, to extend Arkansas’ lead to six before Davalan’s fourth hit of the night brought home Helfrick and made it a 9-2 game.

Aloy stepped up to the plate with two on and one out, hammering a 3-1 pitch over the wall in right to finish off the Razorbacks’ 12-2 victory in seven innings.

Aloy’s two-hit, three-RBI day moved his season slash line to .402/.495/.837 with a team-leading 10 home runs and 31 RBI in 23 games.

Davalan, meanwhile, raised his season slash line to .411/.500/.611 in 23 games with his four-hit effort.

The series continues tomorrow afternoon at Baum-Walker Stadium with first pitch in game two between the Hogs and Gamecocks scheduled for 2 p.m. on SEC Network+.

Arkansas, which has not lost an SEC home opening weekend series since 2015, can clinch its ninth consecutive SEC home opening series with a win tomorrow or in Sunday’s series finale.

Information from Arkansas Communications is included in this story.

Ruscin & Zach March 21

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We have thoughts on the new Arkansas coach and the Razorbacks win over Kansas and the matchup with St. John’s in  Providence. Plus, our Crain Team Bums of the Week.

WATCH: Calipari, Knox, Brazile previewing game against St. John’s

Complete press conference from Providence with Arkansas coach John Calipari along with players Karter Knox and Trevin Brazile.

With former pitcher James Teague sidelined, Robert fills in on Hogs’ baseball

Fans will be busy at Saturday’s game with Razorbacks facing St. John’s in NCAA Tournament, baseball against Gamecocks.

Radio analyst Bubba Carpenter on Razorbacks’ big win in midweek game

Not many games with explosion Hogs had in win over Oral Roberts ahead of South Carolina series this weekend.

Eastside Liquor Halftime Podcast 3-21-25

Hogs beat Kansas!

Guests: Aaron Torres, Robert Teague and Neal Atkinson

Bud Light Morning Rush Podcast: 3-21-25


Arkansas knocks off #7 seed Kansas 79-72! Relive the action with analysis on the tournament!

Guests: Lang Wittman and Clay Henry!

WATCH: Halftime is LIVE at TGI Friday’s in Fort Smith!

Call or text the Lewis Automotive Group Hotline 877-377-6963

Aaron Torres – 11:20
Robert Teague – 12:20
Tye Richardson – 12:35
Neal Atkinson – 1:20

WATCH: The Morning Rush is LIVE at the NCAA Tournament!

Call or text the Lewis Automotive Group Hotline at 877-377-6963

LIVE: Chuck & Bo Show 3/21

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Call or text 877-377-6963

Aidoo, Davis lift Hogs to down Jayhawks with Fland back in lineup

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Arkansas didn’t back off the gas just because they got into the NCAA Tournament.

“We’re still play,” Razorbacks coach John Calipari said after 10th-seeded Arkansas downed No. 7 seed Kansas on Thursday night. It was just the latest meeting between two of college basketball’s winningest coaches.

Jonas Aidoo scored 22 points and Johnell Davis added 18 points, including some crucial late free throws, to help Calipari to his first tournament victory as Hogs coach. Freshman standout Boogie Fland played for the first time since having right thumb surgery in January and scored six points in 24 minutes.

Arkansas will get either No. 2 seed St. John’s or No. 15 Omaha in the second round of the West Region on Saturday.

Zeke Mayo had 18 points for Kansas (21-13), which has made 35 straight NCAA Tournaments and hadn’t lost in the first round since 2006. Aj Storr finished with 15 points and Hunter Dickinson added 11 points and nine rebounds.

Thursday’s matchup was the third March Madness meeting between two of the four active win leaders in men’s college basketball. Calipari is second (876), with Bill Self of Kansas fourth (831) on the list. Both previous meetings were in the national championship game, with each winning once.

Kansas erased what was an 11-point, second-half deficit and nudged ahead 65-64 on a follow shot by Storr with less than six minutes remaining.

The Jayhawks kept the lead until Aidoo connected on a pair of free throws to put the Razorbacks back in front. Arkansas got a stop on the other end and then got a 3-pointer by Davis that gave it a 71-67 cushion with less than two minutes on the clock.

Arkansas’ edge was down to 71-69 before Davis dropped in a pair of free throws. Dickinson missed a 3 on Kansas’ next trip and Arkansas added two more free throws.

The Jayhawks got it back down to 75-72 on a 3-pointer by Rylan Griffen with 13 seconds left. The Razorbacks called back-to-back timeouts trying to get the ball inbounds. They finally did and Davis calmly sank two free throws to help close it out.

It was Arkansas’ first tournament victory since reaching the Sweet 16 in 2023 under former coach Eric Musselman.

The Razorbacks could now face the active coach with the most wins – St. John’s Rick Pitino (884) – in Saturday’s second round. The pair were longtime rivals when Calipari was Kentucky and Pitino coached at Louisville.